Joint Video Experts Team (jvet) of itu-t sg 6 wp and iso/iec jtc 1/sc 29/wg 11



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7.2CE2 related – Loop filters (15)


Contributions in this category were discussed Sunday 15 July in Track B 0900–1220 (chaired by JRO).

JVET-K0042 A study on the overlap in functionality between SAO and ALF [S. . Sethuraman, Nijil K. (Ittiam)]

This contribution provides a study report of disabling SAO in the presence of ALF to understand the coding loss, if any. The motivation is to understand the overlap in functionality between these two in-loop filtering stages with the aim to see whether SAO can be disabled when ALF is enabled so as to reduce the number of cascading in-loop filtering stages and thus reduce the internal memory needs. Since there have been some enhancements to SAO that have been proposed in CE2 experiments, three of the BDRATE improving enhancements have been included during the study. The study results show that the tool OFF BDRATE drop for this modified SAO averages 0.88% in luma under CTC, while the tool ON gain for SAO in the absence of ALF averages -2.0% in luma. The chroma BDRATE drops are higher (at ~3%). Since chroma ALF has only a single class, SAO seems to provide higher improvements in chroma than in luma. In informal visual evaluations that compared ALF-only against ALF+SAO based streams, the latter was seen to remove certain motion trail artefacts (due to the CTB level signalling), implying that SAO still provides perceivable visual quality improvements and additional efforts at improving ALF may be required before SAO can be dropped in the cascade of in-loop filtering stages. Also, other objective quality metrics need to be tried to see which one correlates better with the subjective visual quality in order to reduce the subjectivity in conclusions going forward.

This was an iInteresting study – the bit rate gains of SAO and ALF are partially interdependent;, however, the impact on visual quality justifies that each has its own benefit.

JVET-K0068 CE2 related: Hadamard Transform Domain Filter [V. . Stepin, S. . Ikonin, R. . Chernyak, J. . Chen (Huawei)]

This contribution proposes in-loop filter in 1D Hadamard transform domain which is applied on CU level after reconstruction and has multiplication free implementation. Proposed filter is applied for all CU blocks that meet the predefined condition and filter parameters are derived from the coded information. It is reported that for the random access configuration the proposed method provides 0.50% of luma BD-rate saving with 105% encoding time and 104% decoding time compared to VTM 1.0.

Filtering is done in the Hadamard domain, applying a weight to the Hadamard coefficients that depends on the coefficients and the quantization (somewhat similar as a Wiener filter frequency domain equation). Attenuation factor becomes lower for higher QP. Furthermore, threshold is applied.

Hadamard transform is only applied within the current transform block, not overlapped (same position in processing chain as bilateral filter)

Lookup table is required which is approx. 17 k bytes

Average gain in VTM is 0.5%, BMS 0.4%

Should be compared if it is interdependent with bilateral filter – include in the same sub CE as bilateral filter.

JVET-K0201 Non-CE2: On SAO parameter signalling [G. . Laroche, J. . Taquet, C. . Gisquet, P. . Onno (Canon)]

This contribution presents a modification of the high level SAO parameters signalling. In addition to the SAO HEVC CTU level parameters derivation, the Frame, Line, Column, 2x2 CTU, 3x3 CTU, Temporal and Temporal 90° SAO parameters derivation are available at encoder side and signalling in the slice header. For the additional derivations, the traditional SAO Up and Left Merge flags are removed. In this contribution, only the parameters derivation is modified and the SAO filtering stays at CTU level. An average BDR YUV (14:1:1) gain is reported compared to VTM1.0 of -0.11%, -0.21%, -0.35%, -0.61% for respectively AI, RA, LDB and LDP configurations and an average BDR YUV (14:1:1) gain of -0.07%, -0.24%, -0.57%, -0.51% for respectively AI, RA, LDB and LDP configurations compared to BMS1.0.

Question is raised, as the proposal changes the granularity of SAO adaptation, does it have impact on the visual quality? Not investigated

The proposal also performs inheritance from the reference picture. This requires additional storage of SAO parameters which is undesirable. The fact that there is hardly any gain for AI could suggest that most of the gain comes from that.

The aspect of CTU grouping makes parameter optimization more complicated, kind of slice level optimization. Also conventional SAO could use a similar method with lookahead.

No action on this.



JVET-K0453 Cross-check of JVET-K0201: Non-CE2: On SAO parameter signalling [F. . Galpin, P. . Bordes (Technicolor)] [late]
JVET-K0202 Non-CE2: On SAO Edge Offset classification [G. . Laroche, J. . Taquet, C. . Gisquet, P. . Onno (Canon)]

This contribution presents a modification of the SAO Edge offset classification and offsets coding. The modification of the Edge offset classification is similar to those proposed in CE2-3.4 which consist in modifying the sign function used for the Edge offset category determination. In this contribution, when the same classification as CE2-3.4 is enabled, the peak and valley offsets are coded with an explicit sign signalling as Band offsets and the Luma offsets are predicted by a default value. Moreover, in a second modification, several sign functions are competing at encoder side and explicitly signalled in the bitstream. An average BDR YUV (14:1:1) gain is reported compared to VTM1.0 of -0.11%, -0.21%, -0.18%, -0.48% for respectively AI, RA, LDB and LDP configurations for the first modification and an average BDR YUV (14:1:1) gain of -0.12%, -0.26%, -0.37%, -0.95% for respectively AI, RA, LDB and LDP configurations for both modifications.

Almost no gain in BMS (likely due to interdependency with BMS) – as ALF is now in VTM, this would likely be the case for the next VTM as well.

Proponent is asked to investigate whether the sign in EO might have positive impact in visual quality.


JVET-K0454 Cross-check of JVET-K0202: Non-CE2: On SAO Edge Offset classification [F. . Galpin, P. . Bordes (Technicolor)] [late]
JVET-K0203 Non-CE2: Higher-precision modifications to VVC deblocking filters [C. . Gisquet, J. . Taquet, G. . Laroche, P. . Onno (Canon)]

This proposal describes three modifications to parameters of the deblocking filter. It first asserts that the tC parameter, linearly derived according to bitdepth from a table, suffers from a lack of precision and thus proposes a bitdepth-dependent scalar multiplication approach. Secondly, said parameter, used to clip the output of deblocking filters within a range of the filtered sample, is asserted to be too high compared to at least the distortion produced by the BMS. It then proposes to reduce the maximal value in the same fashion for all deblocking filters. Finally, it proposes a new condition on whether to filter a chroma edge, dependent on the flatness of the luma as measured by the luma deblocking filter on the corresponding luma edge. It reports achieving for Y -0.3%/-0.1%/-0.3% over the VTM anchor for respectively AI/RA/LDB, and -0.8%/-0.3%/-0.6% over the BMS anchor. For YUV, using 14:1:1 weights, these numbers are respectively -0.3%/-0.3%/-0.4% and -0.9%/-0.5%/-0.8%.

The better gain in BMS is likely due to the interdependency with ALF (similar as reported in CE2.4.1.4i). However in case of deblocking filter, design aspects should be studied based on subjective impact rather than visual gain.

Unclear if the normative modifications would be really necessary, and what the contribution of each of the three design aspects is. The crosschecker also reports that the condition on chroma edges would introduce a dependency between luma and chroma which would be undesirable.

It is was also noted remarked that for the aspect of clipping, testing with cClass F (sharp edges) would be important.

Further study in CE.



JVET-K0524 Crosscheck for CE2-related: Higher-precision modifications to VVC deblocking filters (JVET-K0203) [B. . Wang, A. M. . Kotra (Huawei)]
JVET-K0237 CE2-related: Bugfix for deblocking at maximum transform block boundaries [C.-M. Tsai, C.-W. Hsu, Y.-W. Huang, S.-M. Lei (MediaTek)]

In this contribution, a bugfix is proposed for deblocking at transform block (TB) boundaries. In VTM-1.0 and BMS-1.0, each coding blocks (CB) larger than maximum TB is inferred to be further partitioned into multiple TBs by tiling with the maximum TBs, while each CB smaller than or equal to maximum TB has only one TB. However, deblocking is only performed at CB boundaries and always skipped at maximum TB boundaries that do not coincide with any CB boundaries. It is proposed to apply deblocking to maximum TB boundaries that do not coincide with any CB boundaries.

This bugfix was adopted in VTM (see notes under CE2)

JVET-K0503 Crosscheck for CE2-related: Bugfix for deblocking at maximum transform block boundaries (JVET-K0237) [K. . Andersson, Z. . Zhang (Ericsson)] [late]
JVET-K0238 CE2-related: Improvements of sample adaptive offset [C.-Y. Lai, C.-Y. Chen, C.-W. Hsu, Y.-W. Huang, S.-M. Lei (MediaTek)]

(include abstract from new version)

Two aspects:


  • Grouping of CTUs (one row) for optimization of SAO parameters (encoder only) – gives similar gain as K0201 for the cases of AI and RA, but does not require normative change

  • Modification of syntax – does not provide any benefit

Decision(SW): Adopt the non-normative encoder trick (not CTC)

JVET-K0465 Crosscheck of JVET-K0238: CE2-related: Improvements of sample adaptive offset [C.-H. Yao, P.-H. Lin, C.-C. Lin, S.-P. Wang, C.-L. Lin (ITRI)] [late]
JVET-K0489 Cross-check of JVET-K0238: CE2-related: Improvements of sample adaptive offset [T. . Ikai (Sharp)] [late]
JVET-K0239 CE2-related: Filter size reduction in CTB-based ALF [Y.-C. Su, C.-Y. Chen, Y.-W. Huang, S.-M. Lei (MediaTek)]

Based on CE2.4.2.2, a 9x7cross+3x3square filter shape is proposed for CTB-based adaptive loop filter (ALF) for reducing two line buffers in comparison with 9x9cross+3x3square. Compared with VTM-1.0, the 9x7cross+3x3square CTB-based ALF can achieve -2.63%, -4.78%, and -4.45% luma BD-rates with 30%, 39%, and 30% decoding time increases, for AI, RA, and LB, respectively. Compared with BMS-1.0 with ALF disabled, the 9x7cross+3x3square CTB-based ALF can achieve -2.12%, -4.52%, and -4.16% luma BD-rates with 23%, 25%, and 23% decoding time increases for AI, RA, and LB, respectively. Compared with 9x9cross+3x3square CTB-based ALF under VTM-1.0 configuration, 9x7cross+3x3square CTB-based ALF achieves 0.06%, 0.04%, and 0.08% luma BD-rates with 2%, 4%, and 4% decoding time decreases for AI, RA, and LB, respectively. Compared with 9x9cross+3x3square CTB-based ALF under BMS-1.0 configuration, 9x7cross+3x3square CTB-based ALF achieves 0.05%, 0.05%, and 0.08% luma BD-rates with 0%, 1%, and 2% decoding time decreases for AI, RA, and LB, respectively.

Was reviewed in BoG JVET-K0521

JVET-K0467 Cross-check of JVET-K0239: Filter size reduction in CTB-based ALF [Q. . Yu, Y. . Lin (HiSilicon)] [late] [miss]
JVET-K0274 CE2 related: Reduced complexity bilateral filter [J. . Ström, P. . Wennersten, J. . Enhorn, D. . Liu, K. . Andersson, R. . Sjöberg (Ericsson)]

This contribution proposes a modified version of the bilateral filter from JVET-F0034, JVET-F0096 and JVET-J0021. The main modification is a reduction in the size of the look-up table (LUT) that is used to store the filter coefficients. The contribution claims to reduce the total size of the stored variables (including the LUT) from 2783 bytes in JVET-F0096 to 816 bytes, a reduction of 71%. The proposal states that this is achieved by approximating the 34 rows in the LUT (one row is used for every qp) by four rows plus shifting. The contribution further claims that the need for a division table is removed by using the approximation proposed in JVET-J0021. The non-local filtering for inter blocks proposed in JVET-J0021 is reportedly also used. The BD rate figures for an implementation in BMS 1.0 are reported to be -0.33% / -0.52% / -0.60% for AI/RA/LD respectively, and the VTM figures are reported to be 0.33% / -0.81% / -0.59% for AI/RA/LD respectively. The BMS decoder run times are reported to be 101% / 101% / 101% for AI/RA/LD and the VTM decoder run times are reported to be 104% / 103% / 103%.

The reduction in run time is due to re-using difference computations, at the same time increasing the difference computation window which gives small compression gain.

Additional results are also presented that demonstrate almost identical results (small loss for AI, small gain for LD) when the bilateral filter is not used for 4x4 blocks. Gain becomes larger when also 4x8 and 8x4 block are disabled.

Interesting LUT reduction and computation reduction. However, the problem remains that bilateral filter is at a critical path between inverse transform and intra prediction, which might introduce latency in pipelining

It is pointed out that in software implementation the LUT operations cannot be performed in parallel.

Further study (CE) of the aspect of block size restrictions, in terms of performance and whether this resolves the latency issue (e.g. when boundary samples needed for next prediction are filtered first after the inverse transform). How many additional cycles are needed between inverse transform and before the prediction can be started? An initial analysis was shown in track B Monday afternoon, where it was shown that the processed edge samples could be available within 10 cycles after the inverse transform is done. Further consideration necessary if that would be acceptable implementation wise. Further results are shown that the loss by further reducing the number of LUTs to 16 is marginal.

This additional should be provided in an update of the document.



JVET-K0563 Cross-check of contribution JVET-K0274 [J. . Rasch (HHI)] [late]
JVET-K0318 CE2-2.1.1-related: HEVC luma filters and decisions for chroma deblocking [K. . Andersson, Z. . Zhang, R. . Sjöberg (Ericsson)]

This contribution proposes to use HEVC luma filters and decisions for chroma deblocking with some minor adaptations in decisions. For BMS it also applies deblocking of implicit TU boundaries after deblocking of sub-block boundaries from motion prediction to ensure that implicit TU boundaries can be deblocked with more than 1 pixel even when it exist sub-block boundaries 4 samples from the implicit TU boundary. The modifications are implemented on top of CE2-2.1.1.

The proposed solution is claimed to improve subjective quality especially notable for Campfire at low bitrates. It also provides a luma,Cb,Cr BD rate impact of -0.19%,-0.18%,0.17% / -0.18%,-2.20%,-2.22% / -0.12%,-1.89%,-1.69% for AI/RA/LD compared to VTM-1.0 and -0.12%,-1.08%,-0.93% / -0.12%,-2.08%,-2.28% / -0.20%,-2.46%,-2.40% for AI/RA/LD compared to BMS-1.0. Decoding time 105%/106%/107% for AI/RA/LD compared to VTM-1.0 and 103%/104%/103% for AI/RA/LD compared to BMS-1.0.

These are additional changes beyond the bug fix of enabling DBF on large TU boundaries.

It is suggested to use the luma type of decisions for chroma as well.

Samples close to large TU boundaries might be sampled twice (once over subblock and again with long filter at large TU). This would require two passes of DBF, and somewhat inhibit parallelism.

Further study in CE.

JVET-K0494 Crosscheck of JVET-K0318 (CE2-2.1.1-related: HEVC luma filters and decisions for chroma deblocking) [C.-M. Tsai (MediaTek)] [late]
JVET-K0369 CE2-related: Longer Tap Deblocking Filter [A. M. . Kotra, B. . Wang, S. . Esenlik, Z. . Zhao, J. . Chen (Huawei)]

A new longer tap deblocking filter for the luma component is proposed. The proposed filter mainly targets the filtering of blocking artefacts which arise due to the usage of larger size transform units and coding units. The “longer tap” filter introduces new filter condition checks which consider a wider range of spatial activity along the edges. Furthermore, new longer tap filter coefficients are proposed in order to effectively smooth the edges with blocking artefacts belonging to larger blocks. Our proposal also filters the implicit TU boundaries and allows for parallel deblocking of different CUs.

Moreover, to reduce the line buffer requirements for the “longer tap” filter: For the horizontal edges which overlap with the CTU boundaries, the maximum number of samples used in filter decision and the maximum number of samples used in filter modification from the top block are restricted to be the same as in HEVC deblocking filter. Compared to the deblocking filter used in BMS, the proposed method improves the subjective quality of sequences, especially for the ones which are encoded at lower bitrates. Objective results of the proposed longer tap deblocking filer are as follows:

Over VTM Anchor (AI, RA, LDB): Luma BD-Rate gain of -0.12%, -0.13%, -0.02% is achieved without any increase in EncT and DecT.

Over BMS Anchor (AI, RA, LDB): Luma BD-Rate gain of -0.08%, -0.01%, 0.04% is achieved without any increase in EncT and DecT.
Unlike some other proposals of CE2.2, only one condition is checked to decide for the longer filter. Further, it is claimed that line buffer requirements are reduced. Up to 7 samples are filtered at each side.
Include this in the next CE.

The CE shall also report about complexity of the different proposals such as additional line buffer requirements, number of operations due to additional rules, number of operations (worst case) for the filtering, etc.


JVET-K0492 Cross-check of JVET-K0369: CE2-related: Longer Tap Deblocking Filter [C. . Gisquet, J. . Taquet] [late]
JVET-K0372 CE2-related: Additional results for CE2.4.1.4 with chroma filter shape aligned with luma [N. . Hu, V. . Seregin, N. . Shlyakhov, M. . Karczewicz (Qualcomm)]

This contribution presents additional test results for CE2 test 4.1.4 where ALF filter shape for chroma is aligned with luma component. In the BMS ALF, luma filter can be switched between 5x5, 7x7, or 9x9 filter shapes, while chroma filter size is always 5x5. The same flexible filter structure for chroma is tested in this contribution. For maximum ALF filter shape size 9x9, test results reportedly show 3.26%, 5.34%, and 4.63% luma gain in AI, RA, and LB configurations respectively over VTM-1.0 anchor.

Slide deck is available in JVET-K0371.

Somewhat obsolete after the decision on inclusion of another ALF version in VTM.



JVET-K0479 Cross-check of JVET-K0372: CE2-related: Additional results for CE2.4.1.4 with chroma filter shape aligned with luma [R. . Vanam (InterDigital)] [late]
JVET-K0373 CE2-related: Two-dimensional ALF classification [M. . Karczewicz, N. . Hu, V. . Seregin (Qualcomm)]

This contribution proposes a modification to BMS ALF classification. In modified classification, two characteristics: Laplacian based activity and direction are used to form a joint classification. The categorization for each characteristic is signalled to the decoder side, and the joint classification is used instead of the ALF classification in BMS-1.0. Test results reportedly show 3.38%, 5.48%, and 4.82% luma gain in AI, RA, and LB configurations respectively over VTM-1.0 anchor.



Slide deck to be uploaded.

Current classification scheme combines activity and direction. Here, classification for act. and dir. is performed independently, and then certain combinations are mapped with filters. This provides 0.1% bit rate gain, but decoder runtime is highly increased. Not clear if it is conceptually more complex.

Somewhat obsolete after the decision on inclusion of another ALF version in VTM.

JVET-K0534 Crosscheck of JVET-K0373: CE2-related: Two-dimensional ALF classification [M. . Ikeda (Sony)] [late]
JVET-K0382 CE2-related: CTU Based Adaptive Loop Filtering [M. . Karczewicz, A. . Gadde, N. . Hu, V. . Seregin (Qualcomm)]

In this contribution, additional mode for the adaptive loop filter in BMS is proposed. In this mode, selection of the set of filters is done for each CTU. Test results reportedly show 3.10%, 4.96%, 4.31% luma gain for AI, RA, and LB configurations respectively comparing to VTM-1.0 anchor. Additional results with low-delay ALF encoder, where the filters used for the current picture are derived from the previous coded pictures, show 3.05%, 4.72%, 4.16% luma gain for AI, RA, and LB configurations comparing to VTM-1.0 anchor.

Beneficial for low latency encoding. Further study in CE, compared to an equivalent low latency mode with the current ALF (determining coefficients from previous picture, and switching filter on/off at CTU level.)

JVET-K0488 Cross-check of JVET-K0382: CE2-related: CTU Based Adaptive Loop Filtering [T. . Ikai (Sharp)] [late]
JVET-K0388 CE2-related: Improvement on the implementation of adaptive loop filter [Y. . Li, Z. . Chen (Wuhan Univ.ersity), X. . Li, S. . Liu (Tencent)] [late]

This contribution presents some implementation problems about adaptive loop filter (ALF) in the current BMS1.1 software. To solve the problems, a numerical method based on LDLT decomposition is suggested, which can be used to replace the current Cholesky factorization method.

The case could happen when the covariance matrix is not positive definite, or if it does not have full rank, was detected e.g. for uniform pictures.There was a ticket #59 reported, and a patch to resolve this already existing. Therefore the problem is resolved for now, it anyway does not happen under CTC.

The proponents are encouraged to study if the problem of ill-conditioned covariance might also occur with different picture content, e.g. some type of screen content. It might also be the case that it would be better to completely disable ALF if it occurs.



JVET-K0502 Crosscheck report of JVET-K0388 (Improvement on the implementation of adaptive loop filter) [Y. . Zhao (Huawei)] [late]
JVET-K0540 CE2-related: Reduced filter shape size for ALF without classification [V. . Seregin, N. . Hu, M. . Karczewicz (Qualcomm)] [late]

This contribution presents results of CE2 test 4.1.4 where the largest ALF filter shape is reduced from 9x9 to 7x7 and classification process is disabled. Test results provide 1.58%, 3.08% and 2.79% luma gain in AI, RA, and LB configurations respectively over VTM-1.0 anchor for 7x7 max filter size, and provide 1.78%, 3.30% and 3.10% luma gain in AI, RA, and LB configurations respectively over VTM-1.0 anchor for 9x9 max filter size.

The approach investigated here is using one filter for the whole picture, but it can locally be disabled at block level.

Just for information – no action.



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